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Blade Runner 2049Roger Deakins, ASC, BSC continued his collaboration with director Denis Villeneuve - following the features Prisoners and Sicario - with this highly anticipated sequel to director Ridley Scott's 1982 sci-fi classic Blade Runner. Harrison Ford reprises his role as Rick Deckard, who's found by a young "blade runner" (Ryan Gosling) and pulled out of hiding decades after abandoning his job as a replicant-hunting cop in Los Angeles. Deakins will share his insights into the production in an extensive Q&A; our coverage will also include a sidebar with production designer Dennis Gassner. (Which is already available online here.)

From the interview with Deakins: "I thought it would be interesting if the interiors of this huge, monolithic building always had the feeling of moving sunlight. Some of those sets were very severe, just square walls with no windows or obvious light sources, so I looked for different ways to bring patterns of moving light into them. One architectural reference we liked used water as a ceiling piece to create a caustic light effect; we took that idea and embellished it. Two scenes in Wallace's office - which is basically a platform surrounded by water in this big concrete box - were probably the most complicated bits of lighting. The first scene, which introduces Wallace, is actually not very long but needed to be quite impressive. For that we created three circles of light about 25 feet in circumference, with about 35 10K Fresnel lamps on each circle, and put them on a dimmer chaser to create a pattern of moving light. There were square cuts for the light some 15 feet below the lamps so that there were defined patterns across the walls."

Wonder WheelOur Filmmakers' Forum department will present Vittorio Storaro, ASC, AIC's first-person account of reteaming with writer-director Woody Allen for this stylish 1950s-set period drama about a Coney Island carousel operator (Jim Belushi) and his pregnant wife (Kate Winslet) who works as a waitress and falls for a handsome lifeguard (Justin Timberlake).

From the article penned by Storaro himself: "In my ignorance I knew nothing about Coney Island, and this left my figurative imagination somewhat at a loss; however, the respect and collaboration I received from Woody on both a professional and human level convinced me that our expressive relationship would continue. Nonetheless, I was afraid that I would not be able to come up with a pivotal figurative idea for the visual. I confessed all this to Woody, who immediately put my mind at rest by assuring me that we would come up with a specific vision of the film. And then the idea of a superficially serene world in which life's problems later surface suddenly brought to mind Norman Rockwell's painting of the postwar period: a vision of life that was all sweetness and light on the outside, but conflicted at its heart."

Thor: RagnarokJavier Aguirresarobe, ASC, AEC joined forces with director Taika Waititi for the latest chapter in the big-screen saga of Marvel's mighty Thor (Chris Hemsworth). The god of thunder faces a task of cosmic proportions as he has to battle his way out of a lethal gladiatorial contest - in which he's pitted against his former ally, the incredible Hulk (Mark Ruffalo) - and stop the nefarious Hela (Cate Blanchett) from tearing Asgard wholly asunder. Aguirresarobe will offer a guided tour of the planet-hopping adventure.

Says Aguirresarobe in the article: "In my first conversations with Taika, even before hiring me he let me know that the film would be up to 95 percent shot on bluescreen. He asked if that was all right and I replied that it wouldn't be my first time. A couple of years before, I'd shot The Finest Hours, a film about a rescue at sea, which forced us to shoot in a pool surrounded by bluescreen. That turned out to be a great experience - however, there's an important difference between the two films. The Finest Hours was a true story that took place in a familiar setting of a stormy day, and a night out in an uncontrollable sea. In Thor: Ragnarok, the challenge consisted of creating fantastic worlds with settings that originated in our imagination and were lit with realistic lighting. We needed CGI's aid to develop, shape and complete the scenarios."

Suburbicon and Roman J. Israel, Esq.Robert Elswit, ASC was behind the camera for each of these features, which were directed by George Clooney and Dan Gilroy, respectively. In Suburbicon, a quiet town is shaken to its core after a home invasion opens the door to escalating violence, with the unassuming Gardner (Matt Damon) at the heart of it all. Roman J. Israel, Esq., meanwhile, follows the eponymous defense attorney (Denzel Washington) as he navigates an increasingly tumultuous and ever more extreme series of events. Elswit will detail his work on both productions in an expansive Q&A.

From the interview with Elswit: "Given the time we had and all the night work [on Suburbicon], I felt I ultimately had more control if I could light [for] the Alexa. The anamorphic lens was kind of a throwback, an homage to those wonderful social dramas in the 1950s. Today we imagine anamorphic movies as being big outdoor spectacles, but there were lots that were family dramas shot in small spaces. We looked at a few. George [Clooney] loves the way you have to stage in anamorphic and the way it isolates characters - when you do close-ups, the more limited depth of field. He was very intrigued by that kind of stuff."